access to justice

Who Gets the Work? Legal Aid BC’s Own Data Reveals a Two-Tier System for Women and Newer Lawyers

Legal Aid BC exists to ensure that people who can’t afford a lawyer still have access to justice. It’s a mission rooted in fairness. But a demographic data report released in March 2026 and obtained through a freedom of information request by Vancouver lawyer Kyla Lee raises a pointed question: is the system that’s supposed to deliver fairness actually delivering it equally to the lawyers who work within it?

The short answer, based on the data, is no.

Who Gets the Work? Legal Aid BC’s Own Data Reveals a Two-Tier System for Women and Newer Lawyers Read More »

Lowering the Bar Is Not Access to Justice

The Ministry of Attorney General’s draft recommendations on regulated paralegals propose expanding non-lawyer advocacy into courts and administrative tribunals, including traffic court, some criminal matters, small claims, residential tenancy disputes, workers’ compensation matters, and family law in Provincial Court, with possible involvement in Supreme Court matters under a specialization model. 

The proposal is framed as an access to justice initiative, but make no mistake: It is not. It represents a policy choice to lower professional standards in high-stakes legal environments rather than confront the structural failures the government itself created. 

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Kyla Lee Wins the Clawbies Again: Best YouTube Series in 2025

In a crowded legal media landscape, genuinely useful content is hard to find. Content that is clear, engaging, and relevant to both lawyers and the public is even rarer. Kyla Lee’s videocast, Cases That Should Have Gone to the Supreme Court of Canada, But Didn’t, continues to stand out — and has earned another Clawbies Award in 2025.

Kyla Lee Wins the Clawbies Again: Best YouTube Series in 2025 Read More »

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